Conf/CfP - The Art of Praise: Panegyric and Encomium in Late Antiquity, 4-7 January 2018, Massachusetts, USA

Publish Date: Feb 10, 2017

Deadline: Feb 15, 2017

Event Dates: from Jan 04, 2018 12:00 to Jan 07, 2018 12:00

The Art of Praise: Panegyric and Encomium in Late Antiquity
Organizer: Paul Kimball, Bilkent University
Sponsored by the Society for Late Antiquity

Near the turn of the last millennium two collections of essays appeared which called our attention to late antique panegyric. The Propaganda of Power: The Role of Panegyric in Late Antiquity, ed. Mary Whitby (1998) underlined the genre's public and political contexts, while Greek Biography and Panegyric in Late Antiquity, edd. Thomas Hägg and Philip Rousseau (2000) explored its links with the forms and practices of biography and hagiography. The contributions to both volumes made it clear that from origins in the fourth century BCE to the end of antiquity (and beyond), panegyric proved a long-lived and highly adaptable platform for the articulation of social relations and the values that supported them. At the meeting of the Society for Classical Studies in Boston, Massachusetts from 4-7 January 2018, the Society for Late Antiquity will sponsor a session to revisit the significance of the rhetoric of praise in late antiquity. We are especially interested in proposals that examine what, if anything, was distinctively "late antique" about late antique panegyric and encomium. In addition to papers addressing this specific question, we also welcome submissions on all aspects of these genres in late antiquity: theory and practice, political and private contexts, literary and declamatory presentations, prose and verse, parodic and ironic, etc.

Abstracts for papers requiring a maximum of twenty minutes to deliver should be sent no later than February 15, 2017 by email attachment to Paul Kimball at pkimball@bilkent.edu.tr. All submissions will be judged anonymously by two referees. Prospective panelists must be members in good standing of the SCS at the time of submission and must include their membership number in the cover letter accompanying their abstract. Please follow the SCS’s instructions for the format of individual abstracts. The submission of an abstract represents a commitment to attend the 2018 meeting should the abstract be accepted. No papers will be read in absentia and the SLA is unable to provide funding for travel to Boston.

Guidelines for Authors of Abstracts

Note:  The instructions below apply specifically to individual abstracts being submitted to the SCS Program Committee.  Authors of abstracts for Organizer-Refereed Panels, Affiliated Group Panels, and sessions being submitted as units to the Program Committee (e.g., Panels, Seminars, etc.) will find these guidelines useful but should follow formatting and submission instructions issued by the organizers of their particular sessions.

Before preparing your abstract please review the instructions below as well as these recommendations from the Information Architect on the preparation of copy for digital publication and the suggestions for the preparation of abstracts that the Program Committee developed in conjunction with its workshop on abstract writing at the 2010 Annual Meeting.

CONTENT OF ABSTRACTS

The abstract should contain the following information:

a clear initial statement of purpose,

a brief explanation of the abstract's relationship to the previous literature on the topic, including direct citations of any important literature (see "Citations of Literature" below)

a summary of the argumentation

some examples to be used in the argumentation.

The abstract should make it clear that the paper is suitable for oral presentation within the time limit (the maximum time for papers submitted as individual abstracts is 20 minutes).

FORMAT OF ABSTRACTS

Abstracts must be no more than 650 words, not including bibliography.  See “Citations of Literature” below concerning the submission of bibliographical information.

Abstracts including Greek characters should utilize a Unicode font. It is the responsibility of the author to ensure that Greek characters appear correctly.

CITATIONS OF LITERATURE

For documentation, footnotes should not be used. Incorporate citations into the text of the abstract.  In citing bibliography in the text, brief parenthetical references containing the author's name and, when necessary, date usually suffice, but be sure that these are intelligible. Authors of abstracts to be reviewed by the Program Committee should list complete bibliographical citations of works cited in the separate text box by the submission system.  The abstract itself may not exceed 650 words.  Please Note:  Authors may cite relevant work that they have already published, but these citations should be in the same format as any other author's, i.e., in the third person.

For more information click "Further official information" below.


This opportunity has expired. It was originally published here:

https://classicalstudies.org/annual-meeting/2018/149/call-abstracts-art-praise-panegyric-and-encomium-late-antiquity

Similar Opportunities


Disciplines

Communication Studies

History

Linguistics

Eligible Countries

International

Host Countries

United States

Conference Types

Call for Papers